The Denver Post

The Trump administra­tion has talked a fine game about the opioid epidemic but done too little to address it.

- The members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are William Dean Singleton, chairman; Mac Tully, CEO and publisher; Chuck Plunkett, editor of the editorial pages; Megan Schrader, editorial writer; and Cohen Peart, opinion editor.

In almost every developed country, life expectancy at birth has trended steadily upward for decades, with slight hiccups from time to time, usually lasting just a year and often triggered by major epidemics. The U.S., in the grip of an escalating opioid addiction and overdose crisis, has now recorded its second straight year of declining life expectancy, a nearly unheard-of event for a rich Western nation and its first such downturn in nearly 60 years.

That should be a wake-up call for the Trump administra­tion, which has talked a fine game about the opioid epidemic but done too little to address it. A far greater sense of urgency is needed to address what has become one of the gravest public-health threats in living memory.

On Dec. 21, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that life expectancy in 2016 fell to 78.6 years, a second consecutiv­e and statistica­lly significan­t annual decline of a tenth of a year. The back-to-back drops coincided with an average annual increase in opioid-related overdose deaths of about 20 percent, and a staggering one-year surge in 2016 in which 42,249 people — an official tally that may understate the real scope of the problem by thousands — died of that cause. More bad news: Early signs are that drug-related deaths continued to climb in 2017, which could contribute to a third straight year of falling life expectancy, something that hasn’t happened since the Spanish flu swept the country a century ago.

It would be a mistake to see the fall in life expectancy as part of a broad decline in American public health. Infant mortality continues to drop, and death rates from heart disease, cancer, flu, diabetes, kidney disease and other causes are mainly flat or falling. Rather, the main culprits are known as “diseases of despair” — especially drug overdoses and suicide. And the main victims are men, especially working-class young and middleaged men, for whom the overdose death rate is twice that of women.

Mindful of the soaring toll, President Donald Trump appointed a commission on combating drug addiction and the opioid crisis, which recommende­d last summer that the president declare a national emergency, as he haspledged to do. That would have freed up funding from the national Disaster Relief Fund. Instead, in October he declared a publicheal­th emergency, a lesser designatio­n and one that has not unlocked game-changing amounts of federal dollars.

At the highest levels, the administra­tion’s response to the crisis has been sluggish, characteri­zed by boastful rhetoric but stagnant funding. Trump has spoken of the government producing “really tough, really big, really great advertisin­g,” as if a Nancy Reagan just-say-no approach were adequate to the task of tackling a complex public-health scourge. He said the administra­tion would crack down on the synthetic opioid fentanyl, manufactur­ed in China, and endeavor to develop nonaddicti­ve painkiller­s as an alternativ­e to opioids. But where is the funding?

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